13 th african regional meeting addis ababa, 3 december 2015 information session on the ilo...
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13TH AFRICAN REGIONAL MEETINGADDIS ABABA, 3 DECEMBER 2015
INFORMATION SESSION ON THE ILO DEVELOPMENT COOPERATION STRATEGY 2015-17
Session outline
• Introduction– Why a new Development Cooperation Strategy?– Highlights of the ILO Development Cooperation
Portfolio in the African region– Building blocks of the Development Cooperation
Strategy and implementation in the African region• Statements of constituents• Questions & Answers
Why a new Development Cooperation Strategy?
Changing global context:• SDGs: decent work is driver
of sustainable development• Financing for Development:
new actors and partnerships • UN system-wide
coordination effort
Internal processes:• Governing Body request• ILO reform and field review • Programme & Budget 2016-
17• Independent evaluation of
the TC strategy 2010-2015
GB Adoption of the DC Strategy 2015-17 in November 2015
3
Approvals in Africa ± back to pre-2012 level, Africa has 2nd biggest portfolio after Asia
XBTC Approvals by Region, 2010-2014
2010 2011 2012 2013 20140
20,000
40,000
60,000
80,000
100,000
120,000
(US
$ t
ho
usa
nd
s)
Employment is a priority for ILO and its funding partners, followed by Standards, Social Protection
and Social Dialogue
2010 2011 2012 2013 20140
10,000
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
80,000
Standards Employment Social Protection Social Dialogue Policy Making
(US$
thou
sand
s)
XBTC expenditure by Strategic Objective in Africa (2010-14)
5
Partnerships in Africa
Multi-bi53.0%
DDF9.2%
PPPs3.5% Social partners
0.1%
IFIs (Banks)2.1%
UN system22.8%
EU and OIGO9.4%
Total XBTC approvals in Africa by source of funding (2010-2014)
6
5 of the top 10 recipient countries are also funding ILO’s technical assistance
Ranking123456789
10
2014Country US$Egypt 7,221Somalia 7,089South Africa 5,657United Rep. of Tanzania 4,534Zambia 4,492Madagascar 3,288Tunisia 2,841Benin 1,801Mozambique 1,724Dem. Rep. of the Congo 1,702
7
TUNISIA
MOROCCO
SAHARA
ALGERIA
MAURITANIA
MALI NIGE
R
LIBYA
CHAD
EGYPT
SUDAN
ETHIOPIA
DJIBOUTI
ERITREA
SOMALIAKENYA
TANZANIA
DEMOCRATIC
(ZAIRE)
CENTRAL
RWANDA
GABON
EQUATORIAL
ANGOLA
CONGO
NIGERIA
BENIN
DTVOIRE
SIERRA
SENEGAL
GHANA
THE
GUINEA
LIBERIA
CAMEROON
MALAWI
ZAMBIA
MOZAMBIQUE MADAGASCARZIMBABWE
BOTSWANA
SWAZILANDLESOTHO
NAMIBIA
ANGOLA
WESTERN
UGANDA
OF THE CONGO
REPUBLIC
BURUNDI
GUINEAREP. OF
TOGOCOTE
BURKINA
GUINEA
LEONE
GAMBIA
BISSAU
SOUTH
REPUBLIC
AFRICAN
THE
AFRICA
ComorosSao Tome
Mauritius
Seychelles
Cape Verde
ILO in Africa
SOUTH SUDAN
TUNISIA
MOROCCO
SAHARA
ALGERIA
MAURITANIA
MALI NIGE
R
LIBYA
CHAD
EGYPT
SUDAN
ETHIOPIA
DJIBOUTI
ERITREA
SOMALIAKENYA
TANZANIA
DEMOCRATIC
(ZAIRE)
CENTRAL
RWANDA
GABON
EQUATORIAL
ANGOLA
CONGO
NIGERIA
BENIN
DTVOIRE
SIERRA
SENEGAL
GHANA
THE
GUINEA
LIBERIA
CAMEROON
MALAWI
ZAMBIA
MOZAMBIQUE MADAGASCARZIMBABWE
BOTSWANA
SWAZILANDLESOTHO
NAMIBIA
ANGOLA
WESTERN
UGANDA
OF THE CONGO
REPUBLIC
BURUNDI
GUINEAREP. OF
TOGOCOTE
BURKINA
GUINEA
LEONE
GAMBIA
BISSAU
SOUTH
REPUBLIC
AFRICAN
THE
AFRICA
ComorosSao Tome
Mauritius
Seychelles
Cape Verde
Not counted: Regional or subregional projectsWith allocation of some 50 million $
SOUTH SUDAN
160 ongoing projects
in 34 countries
8
The four building blocks
• Quality• Constituents’ needs
and approaches
• Value for Money• Quality & Results• Decentralization• Staff development
• Resource integration and more balanced distribution
• Alignment• Fragility• Larger programmes
Focus Effectiveness
Capacity development
Resources & partnerships• Converging efforts
• Diversify & consolidate• Flexibility• Predictability
ILO DC Strategy 2015-17
9
Highlights of the new DC StrategyFocus on priorities
• Alignment of P&B 2016-17 and DWCPs with:– 2030 SDGs
– National development strategies
– Regional agendas:• Agenda 2063• 2015 African Union Declaration and Plan of Action on Employment, Poverty
Eradication and Inclusive Development• Decent Work Agenda in Africa 2015-2024
• Aim for projects/programmes with a duration beyond the 2-3 year funding period that can be handed over to national counterparts.
• Fewer outcomes, 5 Flagships• DWCPs as the main vehicle for ILO support to national and regional
priorities’ implementation.• Greater agility to deploy to fragile situations (Ebola-hit countries, mass
migration and refugees, conflicts, natural disasters)– A framework strategy for ILO’s engagement in promoting DW in fragile states in Africa
10
• Improved data accessibility, transparency and visualization• Incorporation of the Busan principles and Addis Ababa Action
Agenda (e.g. GPEDC)• Adherence to the Value for Money principle• Improve communication of results with national and regional
development partners• Strengthen institutional supervisory and monitoring mechanisms with
constituents• Consider establishing temporary ILO presence in non-resident
countries facing fragility and special situations
Highlights of the new DC StrategyEffectiveness for impact
11
• Constituents’ needs and demands drive ILO’s capacity development activities (bottom-up approach)
• Capacity development of constituents for:– policy change/influence and monitoring of SDG implementation– mobilizing financial resources
• Simultaneously addresses technical, organizational and institutional competencies
• Implement a complementary capacity-building programme for the various categories of stakeholders as needed
• Facilitate the dissemination and sharing of information• Enhanced ILO focus on national ownership of the programmes
and projects and institution building (impact and sustainability)• South-South and Triangular Cooperation
Highlights of the new DC StrategyCapacity development for policy change
12
• Step up resource mobilization for the implementation of DWCPs
• Integrated resource management (RB, RBTC, RBSA, XBTC + non-funding partnerships and modalities)
• Increase diversification of resources (PPPs, DDF, IFIs…)• Domestic development funding potential, with constituents• Policy coherence with regional development banks in resource
mobilization strategies.• Strengthen the strategic partnership around the
implementation of DWCPs, particularly in the UNDAF framework.
Highlights of the new DC StrategyShared resources and partnerships
13
13TH AFRICAN REGIONAL MEETINGADDIS ABABA, 3 DECEMBER 2015
INFORMATION SESSION ON THE ILO DEVELOPMENT COOPERATION STRATEGY 2015-17
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